Interactive: Explore Janet Yellen’s Official Calendar

Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen attends lots of meetings—more than 950, in fact, since she took office a year ago.

Those meetings through December—with her staff, White House officials, lawmakers and foreign bankers, among others—are all now public and searchable in an updated interactive feature from The Wall Street Journal.

President Barack Obama, for example, pops up twice, meeting with Ms. Yellen in October and November, for 45 minutes each time. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew has met with her 21 times, according to the calendars. And she spends a lot of time with Fed staff and her fellow policy makers.

Each meeting has also been categorized using a subjective criteria so readers can get a broader glimpse at how the world’s most powerful economic policy maker spent her time from February to December, the latest data released by her staff. The categories help highlight some of Ms. Yellen’s priorities in her first year in office. She’s met with foreign officials—often her central banker counterparts in strategically important countries—for about 64 hours during this time. In contrast, she met with White House officials about 42 hours. Members of the media also have received more of her time (29 hours total) than members of Congress (18 hours), according to the schedules.

The Journal obtained Ms. Yellen’s monthly calendars under the federal Freedom of Information Act. Those PDF documents were then converted to data by the Journal, allowing readers to filter, sort and explore the information more easily.

The interactive also contains charts showing the ebb and flow of Ms. Yellen’s first several months in office. Readers can also explore the original documents released by the Federal Reserve. Those records have been annotated by Journal reporters to add context.

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